It appears Burlington's new instant runoff voting system was a success.

The experiment in voting was new this year after a 2005 change in the
city charter. The Burlington mayoral race was the first political
contest to make use of the new system.

State officials and independent observers hailed the new system, citing
its cost-saving benefits and its user-friendly approach to voting.
Secretary of State Deb Markowitz, whose office was keeping close tabs
on the instant runoff system for possible use in statewide elections,
praised the new process.

"It looks like it went very well. Voters knew what they were going in for," Markowitz said. "It was a great experiment."

Markowitz said her office hadn't fielded any complaints about the new
system and from the information reported back to her, everything seemed
to work well. Markowitz suggested that the Burlington race could be
used as a jumping-off point for a move to a statewide instant runoff
system.

"It's a good place to start the conversation," Markowitz said.

City councilor Joan Shannon. D-Ward 5, who sat on the charter change
committee in 2005 and helped make instant runoff voting a reality, said
she was pleased with the runoff system in Tuesday's election. From the
wards she observed, all seemed to be working seamlessly.

"I think generally the public received it well. People certainly got
it. They didn't feel confused and they voted accordingly," Shannon said.

With the old voting system, because none of the candidates received 40
percent of the vote, a runoff would have been necessary, which Shannon
says would have cost the city a lot of money.

Under the new system, voters ranked the candidates by preference.
Because no candidate won a majority when the votes were first counted,
the candidates with the lowest number of votes -- in this case,
Republican Kevin Curley and independents Louie The Cowman Beaudin and
Loyal Ploof -- were eliminated. The second choices of those who voted
for the eliminated candidates then went to the remaining two
contenders--Progressive Bob Kiss and Democrat Hinda Miller. It took
only one round for Kiss to gain a majority of the votes.

Shannon contends the system eliminates the "spoiler candidate effect."
In the 2000 presidential election, Green Party candidate Ralph Nader
was accused of being a spoiler candidate when he ran against Al Gore
and now-President George W. Bush.

Beneficiaries of the spoiler effect might not like the new system, but it's a fairer method, Shannon said.

Not everyone is as convinced of the instant runoff system's efficacy.
Anthony Gierzynski, an associate professor of political science at the
University of Vermont, offered concerns about the complexity of the
ballot and how that might exclude some voters from the democratic
process.

Gierzynski's students conducted exit polls of about 1,000 Burlington
voters. The results won't be ready until next week, but Gierzynski says
he did get the sense the new ballots were problematic to some voters.
He'll examine the data his students collected to see if there were any
differences in understanding the new system across education levels and
the various city wards.

"Some people felt they had to rank all five candidates. There was some
confusion and those were the people who didn't like it," he said.